34 The ultimate in Sweaters if" <.;it{.;: :,"':, :;: :, :, ..": ,:-'} ......... ..-it.: , .. ""}:";';:! ;i y;' ';}':"'f". <:: . . ... 0::' ):.:: :' ; 1 J - .=:::; :" ";. ( " , :..:' ::ë:: \.'. . :..-.;: ) ðtli :1'i; j'" ..;{..... . ,- <-," 'Hi!i!:t ......: :;::::.: ::::r:: " , '.: , ){i' 1:'; : ..:.:..... ..::.;:;..... ì( ,'. , }{:i ,;; }I\ ;,..;. ...... ',; " ":E j , t<.. !.W: l 1 "A f. , ..'. : ;,,':/\::: ::::: ..... : f , :,\ill 4 !i:: II . No PICTURE, nor its proverbial equivalent of a thous.and words, can convey an accurate impression of this Braemar pullover sweater.. Only through the sense of touch can one realize its astonishing soft- ness. Onl y by actual \vear can one discover its superlative com- fort, its snugness, and the resili- ence with \vhich this purest Indian rf T \i. :..:::.......:.:. . ::Ç.-:;:::" . , ' (1, :;." :i. i : , " '<':':':', .*Ä $ l:', ': tWt; , ;::; i; il :t ;. PRICE [,2-10-0 C.ashmere yields to every move- ment of the body. Only years of use can truly reveal its inherent durability. This garment is of that ulti- mate quality traditionally asso- ciated with Smith, of Bermuda. Its cost is definitely less than would be expected for a sweater of such fineness. a j/6 FrVE SHOPS IN (EST 1889) COATS · SPORTSWEAR · BRAEMAR SWEATERS · PERFUMES British Apparel of All Sorts for Men and Women year! " It was not quite as often as that, but nearly. The alluring Pauline, we felt, gave the place a dangerously decep- tive air of wealth and luxury. Once, when we were in the country, burglars lived in our house for a week. That time they got the silver, which we had vainly hidden behind James Parton's books. Another time they got what little valu- able jewelry my aunt and grandmother possessed-and nearly got me, for I had been sent upstairs to fetch something out of a closet in the charnber where they were hiding, and had not been able to get the closet door open, because, as we found a little later, they had been holding the knob against me from the inside. Burglars were far less deadly then than now, but it was probably as well I had not opened that door quick- ly enough to take them by surprise. It was after that attempt that Fanny Fern, writing in the Ledger, inquired why, if burglars must burgle, they didn't rob rich publishers instead of poor au- thors, a hint which was promptly ac- cepted. Robert Bonner and his son found two in their house a few days later and pursued them, but the burglars got away across lots with the Bonners' sil- ver. He made a humorous complaint to my grandmother, but she told him it only showed what sort of people read his paper. I REMEMBER Robert Bonner well. He never raced himself, but he was the owner of many famous trotting horses. Dexter was king of his stable when I was a little girl, and Nancy Hanks and Maud S came later. On one memorable afternoon Mr. Bonner took James Parton for a spin on the Bloom- ingdale Road, with myself crowded be- tween their knees. Mr. Bonner that day held the reins over another one of his horses, a swift, lovely thing named Pocahontas. I clung tight to the brim of my hat, and it seemed that I could scarcel y breathe for the rush and speed of our flight, as we sped gloriously past everything on the road. Later we visited Mr. Bonner's stables, where I patted, a little gingerly, the great Dexter him- self, and was allowed to enter the stall and make friends with a less nervous trotter, who nuzzled my neck and tried to eat my floppy straw hat. I was much impressed with the large pincushions at the head of each stall, bristling with Swiss-carved wooden brooches which were used to pin the trotters' blankets. Less eminent horses figure also in my childish recollections: sleek, dash- ing horses in glittering harness hung with bells, drawing elegant sleighs with